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JOHN OF IRELAND (JOHANNIS DE IRLANDIA...

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 449 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN OF IRELAND (JOHANNIS DE IRLANDIA), (ft. 1480)  , Scottish writer, perhaps of
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Lowland origin, was
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resident for
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thirty years in Paris and later a professor of
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theology . He was
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confessor to James IV. and also to Louis XI. of France, and was rector of
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Yarrow (de Foresta) when he completed, at
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Edinburgh, the
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work on which rests his
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sole claim as a vernacular writer . This
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book, preserved in MS. in the Advocates' Library, Edinburgh (MS . 18, 2, 8), and labelled " Johannis de Irlandia opera theologica," is a
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treatise in Scots on the wisdom and discipline necessary to a prince, especially intended for the use of the young James IV . The book is the earliest extant example of
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original Scots
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prose . It was still in MS. in 1910, but an edition was promised by the Scottish Text Society . In this book John refers to two other vernacular writings, one " of the commandementis and uthir thingis pretenand to the salvacioune of man," the other, " of the tabill of confessioune." No traces of these have been discovered . The author's name appears on the registers of the university of Paris and on the rolls of the Scottish parliaments, and xv . Ighe is referred to by the Scottish historians, Leslie and Dempster . See the notices in John Lyden's Introduction to his edition of the Complaynt of Scotlande (1801), pp . 85 seq.; The Scottish
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Antiquary, xui . 111–115 and xv .

1–14 . Annotated extracts are given in

Gregory Smith's Specimens of
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Middle Scots (1902) .

End of Article: JOHN OF IRELAND (JOHANNIS DE IRLANDIA), (ft. 1480)
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